The Right to Be
Forgotten
BACKGROUND
Today, more than 3 million citizens are facing a cancer diagnosis and every year, one man in 3 and one woman in 4 will develop cancer.
The last decades have seen the cure rate dramatically improve with more than 55% of cancer patients medically cured of the condition. On an annual basis, the proportion of cancer survivors is increasing by 3% thanks to early diagnosis and innovative treatments that allow survivors to take part in socio-economic activities for the rest of their lives. Nowadays many cancers, such as breast cancer, childhood leukemia, and testis cancer, present survival rates are above 80%.
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST CANCER SURVIVORS
Thanks to the tremendous progress of medicine in the last decades, cancer is no longer a death sentence, and more and more citizens are able to enjoy a “normal” life, at least from a health point of view.
However, many cancer survivors face discrimination and penalisation when attempting to return to their professional lives and realise their personal dreams. Ensuring cancer survivors’ quality of life needs to go beyond preventing the potential recurrence of the disease and must support their full integration and re-insertion into society at all levels.
Cancer survivors are indeed the object of several forms of discrimination, years or even decades after they were deemed cured by health professionals. They are, amongst other forms, discriminated against when seeking or returning to work or when trying to access financial services such as mortgages and insurance.
FINANCIAL DISCRIMINATION
By financial discrimination, we mean the unfair and unequal treatment of individuals or groups (here cancer survivors) based on their medical history.
Financial discrimination occurs when people are disadvantaged, denied opportunities, or treated differently when trying to access financial services, solely due to their medical history. As a result of this discrimination, financial institutions such as banks and insurance companies might deny their services or provide different terms, often in the form of prohibitively high premiums, to cancer survivors.
Financial discrimination perpetuates and reinforces social and economic inequalities, making it harder for cancer survivors to live normal lives and fulfil their personal or professional aspirations.